Chapter 1. Responding to the Call to Come Over and Help DRAFT Not to be distributed Bk-1-01Chap-RespondingToCall Jan 17, 2018
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- Derrick Bates
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1 The mission to Cameroon in Central West Africa by the North American Baptist Conference (then called the German Baptist Churches of North America) started when a newly graduated seminary student, August Steffens and wife Anna sailed to Cameroon in But it seemed the mission might end after only nineteen months. In 1890 August Steffens, a student in the Rochester Seminary [1] in upper New York read about two Native Baptist churches in the German colony of Cameroon in Africa that had called for a missionary to come and help them. British and Jamaican Baptist missionaries had been there earlier, but had left because of irreconcilable differences with German Government officials who had suddenly taken over Cameroon. Thousands of villages in Cameroon s vast interior had never heard the Good News of Jesus (the Gospel). Steffens decided he would volunteer to go there after finishing his senior year of seminary. Other student friends of Steffens had been sent overseas as missionaries to India by the American Baptist Missionary Union. But the Union s support was not available to Steffens since Cameroon was not one of their fields. The Missionary Committee of the German Baptist Churches in North America to which Steffens belonged was concentrating their mission work on starting German-language churches among German immigrants in North America. So Steffens corresponded with Pastor Eduard Scheve in Berlin, Germany who was in contact with the two Native Baptist churches in Cameroon. Steffens wrote: More and more the conviction grows upon me that I should go there [Cameroon] as a missionary. I have therefore decided to go, if God will open the way [2]. After 5 months, Steffens letter still had not been answered. The Berlin Mission Committee, an auxiliary [3] of the Baptist churches of Germany, was sending financial support to the two independent Native Baptist churches in Cameroon. But the Committee was not planning to send missionaries to Cameroon since it did not have the financial resources for such an undertaking. But things changed when Pastor Scheve received a letter from his friend August Rauschenbusch [4] who had been Steffens seminary teacher. Rauschenbusch wrote: There is a young man in our seminary, who will graduate next spring and who is anxious to become a foreign missionary He is possessed of a desire to go to Cameroon. I urge upon you brethren to give this matter serious consideration [5]. The personal recommendation by the esteemed August Rauschenbusch was in effect a missionary appointment and probably taken to imply financial support. August Steffens had also said in an earlier letter: I do not think that I should have any financial need because the Lord, if it is His will, He will open a way [6]. The Berlin Mission Committee would most likely continue to rely on Rochester Seminary s German Department for recommendations of missionaries from North America to Cameroon. Thus Rochester Seminary s German Department became, in essence, a missionary sending body since financial support of the missionaries from the German Baptist Churches in North America was also tied to their recommendations. 1
2 The Pioneer Missionaries August Steffens was born in 1861 in Germany. As a teenager he became a believer, was baptized and joined a Baptist church. The Steffens family immigrated to the USA when August was nineteen and settled in Trenton, Illinois, a small town some 25 miles east of St. Louis, Missouri in America s Midwest. Like other German immigrants, Steffens found it harder to adjust to America than those from the British Isles because of the language difference. With no Baptist church in Trenton at that time, Steffens took the convenient train service to St. Louis to a Baptist church where the worship services were in his native German. The church was a part of the German Baptist Churches of North America, an ethnic denomination encouraged and supported by American Baptist churches. On Sunday afternoons Steffens would return to Trenton to lead a Sunday school class for young boys in a schoolhouse. Through such experiences along with Bible study and prayer Steffens sensed a pull toward full-time Christian ministry. As a teenage apprentice tailor his schooling did not include a high school education. Through his church he heard about the Rochester Seminary in Rochester, New York which had a department that offered preparatory level courses as well as college level courses in Bible, theology, and other subjects. Created as a school to train pastors for German-language churches, the courses were taught in German. So in 1886 at age 25 after a farewell gathering in the Trenton Methodist Church, August Steffens boarded a train to enroll in Rochester Seminary s German Department which in reality was a Bible school sponsored by a graduate theological seminary. Classes were small and up to that time the largest graduating class had been twelve. The graduates of department received a diploma stating they had completed the course. This training school had started as a separate department of the Rochester Seminary in 1858 when August Rauschenbusch was called from the German-language Baptist church he pastored in rural Missouri to be the German Department s head professor. Rauschenbusch s education had been in the German universities at Berlin and Bonn under the influence of pietistic [8] Lutheran professors. He had become a Baptist after coming to the USA as a missionary to remote German immigrant settlements in Missouri. As the only full-time professor of the German Department at its start, Rauschenbusch taught many different courses. He did have help from the pastor of Rochester s German Baptist Church as well as budding young professors from Germany that Rauschenbusch recruited for short-terms. Augustus Strong, who later became president of Rochester Seminary, said of Rauschenbusch s teaching: He taught psychology, Bible, botany, history, homiletics, zoology, grammar, speech, theology, astronomy, ethics, and etiquette, along with Latin, Greek, German, and English. But whatever he did, he did well. He was born to be a scholar and a teacher. In him extraordinary versatility was combined with 2
3 extraordinary precision [9]. Rauschenbusch s wife Karoline pitched in to help make the struggling school a home for the students: She was a motherly friend to many. At her instigation a sewing circle was formed in their house in order to care for the students clothing and laundry. From other societies and individuals she procured important gifts of bedding needed by the students [10]. The Seminary s German Department, was sometimes (borrowing from the Old Testament) called School of the Prophets. An early seminary professor and historian of the German Baptist churches in North America, Albert J. Ramaker, wrote: it is to the credit of the small group of German churches and their leaders in this early time that, although they had neither hand nor voice in the founding of this school of the prophets, they nobly co-operated from the very first and thereby made it a successful school [11]. Charles Zummach, who like Ramaker was a graduate of the seminary s German Department and a history buff, explained how the German Department became a formal part of the German Baptist Churches of North America: In 1865 the first General Conference met in Wilmot, Ontario. Among the many far-reaching actions taken by that body was the official adoption of the seminary as a denominational project [12]. The leaders of the small group of German-language Baptist churches had early on expressed appreciation to the Rochester Seminary for taking the initiative of opening their school to German-speaking students. This was recorded in a resolution in 1851 at the first conference of leaders of Germanlanguage ministries in North America: we express our joy and hearty thanks to the administration and faculty of the Theological Seminary in Rochester for their willingness to put forth efforts to train German young men for the ministry [13]. After graduating from seminary Steffens went to his home church in St. Louis and was ordained for missionary service. He then traveled to New York City raising funds along the way as he visited German Baptist churches in Iowa, Illinois, and Michigan [14]. At a farewell gathering for him in a New York church it was reported that for the Cameroon mission several hundred dollars were received by the brother and many commitments and support for the mission work without request [15]. (Note: Hundreds of dollars in 1891 would be equivalent to thousands today when adjusted for inflation). In New York August Steffens boarded a steamship bound for Germany. In his seminary days he had met Anna Cappell at a mission conference of the Student Volunteer Movement [16]. According to family tradition, it was love at first sight [17]. Anna was known to have a warm interest in foreign missions. August had earlier asked Anna to marry him so together they could go to Cameroon. However she did not give him an answer before he left New York for Germany. But Anna knew that her beloved s contact in Germany was Pastor Scheve. Upon Steffens arrival in Germany Pastor Eduard Scheve handed him a recently received telegram. It had been sent by A. Cappell and gave an upcoming arrival time in Germany. Not knowing if A was a man or woman, Scheve asked August for an explanation. Somewhat embarrassed, August said 3
4 the telegram was from Anna, his sweetheart, whom he had earlier asked to marry him but had not received an answer before he left New York. He then explained: This telegram is the answer, and according to it, she must arrive in the next few days [18]. After Anna arrived in Germany Pastor Scheve was able to get a judge to allow their marriage in Berlin even though the law in Germany at that time was unclear about marriages of foreigners. After securing their travel papers the Steffens left by ship for Cameroon, then a German colony. The Dream Realized On December 8, 1891 newlyweds August and Anna Steffens were at the destination that would have seemed impossible a year earlier when he was a student at the seminary in Rochester and she was teaching school in Cincinnati. But there they were, ready to go ashore to the country in central-west Africa known to English speakers as Cameroons or Cameroon. In Germany it was known as Kamerun or New Germany. Before 1884 the Cameroons River (Wouri River to the natives) area had in effect been an international port where traders on ships came from various countries. At that time Cameroon was not yet ruled by a European government as was the case for most of Africa. But the status of Cameroon changed in 1884 when German authorities came with a military escort and concluded a treaty with some tribal chiefs of the Cameroons River area that made Germany the sole European ruling country of Cameroon. From the anchored ship August had his first look at Cameroon. He wrote:...when the sun s rays met the water at an almost perpendicular angle, the Cameroon Mountains came enchantingly into view. Like a great world pyramid these mountains, whose peaks rise above the clouds, appear to hold watch over the gates of New Germany. I had imagined the destination of my journey to be very beautiful, but how could I in my fancy ever picture anything nearing this reality [19]! August and Anna Steffens were taken ashore to Victoria (today s Limbẻ). There they were joyfully received by members of the small Baptist church established 30 years earlier by British Baptist Missionary Alfred Saker together with Jamaican and African believers who had left the nearby island of Fernando Po because the ruling Spanish authorities would no longer allow their church to meet corporately [20]. The pastor and the members in Victoria wanted August and Anna to stay there and had prepared a little house for them [20]. But Steffens plan was to start in the more populated area of today s city of Douala with its river access to the hundreds of villages where the Gospel had not yet been proclaimed. Within a few days members of the Bethel Native Baptist Church of Douala came to Victoria with a big canoe to collect August and Anna. The way to Douala went through miles of mangrove swamps. Steffens would describe the experience in a letter published in the periodical of the German Baptist Churches of North America: Soon we reached the dark currents 4
5 of the Matuma River where we were quickly covered with sailcloth and the men rowed with all their strength in order that we might not be exposed very long to the stinking vapors from the mangrove swamps [21]. It was thought that the often-deadly (especially for newly-arrived white people) tropical fever common in coastal Cameroon was contracted from such bad air. The fever became known as malaria derived from the Italian mal and aria meaning bad air. Most Europeans coming to Cameroon experienced tropical fever at different levels, with death not uncommon. A better understanding of malaria, however, was in process. A medical researcher had tracked the cause of the fever to a parasite in one s blood transmitted by a bite from a certain mosquito species. This, however, seems to have not yet been commonly-accepted knowledge. In his letter Steffens continued: All breathed with relief when, after several hours of travel, we had the fever miasmas [infectious vapors] behind us and reached the magnificent Cameroons River, which in its lower course is mixed with saltwater and looks more like a lake than a river [22]. In Cameroon the young couple s time passed quickly during the years as they learned to be at home in the new culture. Steffens desire to reach beyond the established mission work would at times take him away from the lowlands of Douala to the looming Cameroon Mountains. In a letter he told of one such experience in the vicinity of today s town of Buea: Among the Bakwiri tribes in the Cameroon Mountains, we have taken hold of three places besides Victoria from which the last [at times] lies high in the clouds. I preached one evening there about the one mediator between God and mankind and was very happy to see the eagerness for the faith of the young little congregation. Nevertheless, the sharp coolness of the night was uncomfortable for me [23]. Steffens vision of reaching beyond the already evangelized Douala area after helping the established Native Baptist Church there did not always sit well with the Cameroonian pastor who had earlier written to Germany asking for a missionary to come and help. On one occasion when Missionary Steffens had been away from Douala for a week among the Bakwiri people in the mountain area, his Douala Cameroonian pastor friend explained: If we could have succeeded alone we would not have needed to pray unceasingly for help. It would only then be right that the missionary should overlook us and help others [24]. The Vision Early in the Steffens time in Cameroon he had written: Our plan for the future, or at least as far as the doors open, is to conquer the whole of Cameroon for the Lord Jesus Christ [25]. In today s terminology it might be stated as the evangelization of all of Cameroon. But Steffens was also a realist and later would write to editor Julius Grimmell: We will not expand the mission field beyond our strengths A few government officials desire very much that we would begin an entirely new work [of schools and churches] They tell of a beautiful land [in the interior s grasslands] where there is no lack of food only eight days travel [by foot] distant. Such an undertaking, however, lies completely beyond our reach, since the trip 5
6 would consume [cost] huge sums [26]. The tribal groups in Cameroon s interior grasslands would have to wait years, or perhaps decades, before it would be feasible for missionaries and native evangelists to establish churches there. In the meantime, evangelization would continue in the coastal forest area. To start the process of planting a church, the missionary would talk with the village chief and agree to start a school if the village would provide the building. A trained Cameroonian from the Bethel Native Baptist Church in Douala would be sent to teach at the school and start a preaching station. But then Steffens hit a wall: the Berlin Committee ran out of funds to support more Cameroonian workers. In a letter, Steffens, evidently after a siege of malaria, shared his discouragement as he pondered the huge task: My wife and I were given to the work anew from the brink of the grave [Then] from among the [American] Mennonites came the news that they would help Also, the brothers studying in Rochester [Seminary] as well as the [women s] societies in Brother Daniels congregation in New York sent sums so that we can maintain eight newly-founded stations [27]. After two and one-half years the unhealthful conditions took its toll. August would at times be worn down by recurring attacks of malaria but always seemed to be able to spring back. Quinine, a substance that could ward off the effects of malaria [28] was available in Cameroon. However questions lingered about its effectiveness, possibly due to lack of knowledge of how to properly prepare and administer the medication. On July 4, 1893 August Steffens died in Douala from the complications of malaria. As was then common in the tropics, he was buried the same day. His gravestone stands in Douala with the words His memory remains a blessing. With no other Baptist missionaries in Cameroon, Mrs. Steffens would most likely return home. The Steffens vision for the evangelization of all of Cameroon would likely also die. Or so it would seem. Notes: 1. Steffens was a student in the Rochester Seminary s somewhat independent German Department which would be moved to Sioux Falls, South Dakota in 1949 eventually becoming today s Sioux Falls Seminary. 2. Scheve, E[duard]. pp The Mission of the German Baptists in Cameroon, West Africa ( ) Sioux Falls: North American Baptist Heritage Commission (Unpublished English manuscript). Translation by Myrtle Ertis of Die Mission der deutschen Baptisten in Kamerun, West-Afrika (von 1884 bis 1901). n.d. [1902]. Berlin: Verlag der Missions-Gesellschaft der deutschen Baptisten 3. Oncken, William S. p. 4. The Mission in the Cameroons and the German Baptists. Quarterly Reporter of the German Baptist Mission. September (periodical published in London). 4. August Rauschenbusch, the founding professor of Rochester s German Department, was the father of Walter Rauschenbusch who would become known for his books on the social aspects of the Christian faith. 5. Scheve, E[duard]. p Leuschner, Martin L. p See His Banners Go! in Herman von Berge, et al. These Glorious Years: The Centenary History of German Baptists of North America, n.d. [1944]. Cleveland: Roger Williams Press. 7. Cowden, Gerald Steffens. p. 18. A Magnificent Missionary Obsession in Annual (periodical of the North American Baptist Conference). 8. Pietism was a movement within Lutheran and Reformed churches in Europe in the 17 th century and was characterized by personal faith and devotion much like the later American evangelicalism. 6
7 9. Rauschenbusch, August and Walter. p Life and Ministry of August Rauschenbusch. Sioux Falls: NABHC Translation by Donald H. Madvig of Leben und Wirken von August Rauschenbusch Rauschenbusch, August and Walter. p Ramaker, Albert J. p. 83. The German Baptists in North America: An Outline of their History Cleveland: German Baptist Publication Society. 12. Zummach, Charles F. p. 71. Our School of the Prophets in Herman von Berge et al. 13. Woyke, Frank. p. 7. Heritage and History of the North American Baptist Conference. n.d. [1979]. Oakbrook Terrace, IL: North American Baptist Conference. 14. Cowden, Gerald Steffens. p Sendbote, Der. July 29, (The German-language periodical of the German Baptist Churches of North America which became the North American Baptist Conference. Select articles are translated into English at the North American Baptist Heritage Center.) 16. The Student Volunteer Movement ( s) encouraged college students to consider foreign mission service. Much like today s InterVarsity Christian Fellowship s Urbana Student Missions Conference. 17. Cowden, Gerald Steffens. p & 19. Scheve, E[duard]. p Victoria Centenary Committee. p Victoria, Southern Cameroons, Victoria, Southern Cameroons: Basel Mission Book Depot Sendbote, February 17 (3 quotations), June 22, and November Sendbote, April 19, Sendbote, August 10, Even though progress has been made against malaria, the Sep. 1, 2015 Fortune magazine reported that malaria strikes 200 million people a year in the world and kills 600,000 - the majority children. 7
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